EFTA00162594.pdf
PDF Source (No Download)
Extracted Text (OCR)
From: The Washington Post <
it>
To: '
Subject: [EXTERNAL EMAIL] - [MARKETING] The Daily 202: George W. Bush is right about
Afghanistan. It doesn't matter.
Date: Fri, i6 Jul 202115:47:30 +0000
Importanc Normal
e:
Unsubscribe
It appears that you have subscribed to commercial messages from this sender. To stop receiving such messages from
this sender, please unsubscribe
Sign up for this newsletter
Read online
The Washington Post
The Daily 202
Intelligence for leaders.
Presented by Blue Cross Blue Shield Association
By Olivier Knox
er Knox with Mariana Atfaro
I
Email
Welcome to The Daily 202 newsletter! Tell your friends to sign up
here. On this day in 1969, Apollo 11 rocketed to the heavens to make the
first manned mission to the surface of the moon.
With the Taliban making big gains in Afghanistan and some analysts
predicting a "who lost the war?" debate, former president George W. Bush
warned this week women and girls there will suffer "unspeakable harm"
after the American withdrawal.
EFTA00162594
In an interview with Germany's Deutsche-Welle, Bush also predicted
Afghans who worked with U.S. forces are "just going to be left behind to be
slaughtered by these very brutal people, and it breaks my heart."
"The consequences are going to be unbelievably bad," said the former
president, who sent troops to Afghanistan nearly 20 years ago to hunt
down Osama bin Laden after the 9/11 attacks.
Bush is almost certainly right about the fate of women and girls
under the Taliban, though at least some of the Afghans who partnered with
America over the past two decades are on track to get evacuated.
ADVERTISEMENT
Content from Blue Cross Blue Shield Association
Expanding access to close the low-income coverage gap
Is]
Millions of people could gain access to high-quality health care by expanding
Medicaid.
Let's close the low-income coverage gap and create a more equitable health care
system.
But President Biden has rebutted those criticisms, and the
growing chorus of hawks warning the American withdrawal is a
mistake. He most notably did so in what we might call a
"prebuttal" in a February 2020 interview with CBS News.
;I-A U.S. soldier walks along a road that is under construction near Bagram, about
37 miles from Kabul, in 2O1O. (Joel Saget/AFP/Getty Images)
A U.S. soldier walks along a road that is under construction near Bagram, about 37 miles from Kabul, in
2010. (Joel Saget/AFP/Getty Images)
We'll get to that question and answer session in a moment. It's a
fascinating look at Biden's attitude toward Afghanistan and how the
EFTA00162595
president approaches the question of when to send American men and
women into combat.
First, though, the news out of war-ravaged Afghanistan this
week all seems to be foretelling the same dark future.
There was the chilling video of Taliban fighters executing 22 Afghan
commandos who were trying to surrender. NATO ally France told its
citizens to quit the country, chartered a special July 17 flight to evacuate
them, and warned there would be no others. Taliban fighters took control
of an important border crossing into Pakistan (whether they still hold it is
under dispute), after seizing others linking Afghanistan to Iran,
Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan. And the Islamist militia grabbed ever
more control over territory and infrastructure.
ct2,
GLr
All of this has happened since Biden defended the
American withdrawal — which is quite popular — in a July
8 speech, his first public remarks on the subject since he
announced in April U.S. forces were pulling out.
My colleagues Cleve R. Wootson Jr., Dan Lamothe, and John Wagner
reported:
" 'Let me ask those who want us to stay: How many more — how many
thousands more Americans, daughters and sons — are you willing to
risk?' Biden said from the East Room of the White House, standing in front
of the flags of the U.S. military branches. `I will not send another
generation of Americans to war in Afghanistan with no reasonable
expectation of achieving a different outcome.' "
(The language was reminiscent of Biden climate envoy John Kerry's 1971
rebuttal to politicians who urged a continued presence in Vietnam: "How
EFTA00162596
do you ask a man to be the last man to die in Vietnam? How do you ask a
man to be the last man to die for a mistake?")
White House aides also note that staying beyond the target
withdrawal date set by President Donald Trump could have
led Taliban fighters to target Americans, about 2,400 of
whom have died in Afghanistan over 20 years of war.
Biden voted in favor of the Afghan war in September 2001. But by the time
President Barack Obama was weighing a troop "surge" there, he was a
committed skeptic. My colleague Greg ,Jaffe reported in February
2020 that the future president argued against the surge in a memo he
wrote in longhand and sent to Obama via fax over Thanksgiving weekend
in 2009.
C.
Which gets us to Biden's Feb. 23, 2020 interview with CBS.
Biden confirmed a report in The Washington Post he had declared in an
internal administration debate he would not send his son to Afghanistan to
fight for women's rights.
"What I meant was there's a thousand places we could go to deal with
injustice," he said. "The question is is America's vital self-interest at stake
or the vital self-interest of one of our allies at stake?"
Anticipating a U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, "Face The Nation"
host Margaret Brennan asked Biden "don't you bear some responsibility for
the outcome if the Taliban ends up back in control and women end up
losing the rights?"
"No I don't," Biden replied. "Look, are you telling me that we should ... go
to war with China because what they're doing to the Uyghurs, a million
EFTA00162597
Uyghurs, out in the West in concentration camps? Is that what you're
saying to me?"
Biden continued: "Do I bear responsibility? Zero responsibility.
The responsibility I have is to protect America's national self-
interest and not put our women and men in harm's way to try to solve
every single problem in the world by use of force. That's my responsibility
as president. And that's what I'll do as president."
Share The Daily 202
What's happening now
This weekend is set to bring the summer's fourth major heat
wave. "Another weekend is set to bring another string of potentially
record-breaking high temperatures to another part of the Western United
States,"the New York Times reports. "This time, it is the northern Rockies
and the High Plains, including parts of Montana, Idaho, Wyoming and
Utah, that will be under a high-pressure system known as a heat dome,
according to forecasts. That will set temperatures in those states soaring
through the weekend and early next week, peaking on Monday."
To start your day with a fidl political briefing, sign up for our Power Up
newsletter.
Lunchtime reads from The Post
• "The health and climate consequences of the American food
system cost three times as much as the food itself," by Laura
Reiley: "The U.S. spends $1.1 trillion a year on food. But when the
impacts of the food system on different parts of our society —
including rising health care costs, climate change and biodiversity loss
EFTA00162598
— are factored in, the bill is around three times that, according to a
report by the Rockefeller Foundation, a private charity that funds
medical and agricultural research."
• "A man in a gladiator costume filmed the Jan. 6 mob for his
mother, feds say: `Here comes the riot police, Mom,' 0° by
Katie Shepherd: "When Nathan Wayne Entrekin joined a crowd of
rioters that pushed its way into the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, he donned
a Roman gladiator costume over jean shorts and a T-shirt despite the
winter chill, federal investigators say. As the mob chanted, Entrekin
allegedly filmed videos on his cellphone, narrating the action for his
mother, who was back in Arizona. Wow, Mom. I wish you were here
with me,' Entrekin said in one video, according to a criminal
complaint. `It's really exciting in here. It's joyful and it's sad at the
same time. We can't let Biden ... be our president. We can't ... there's
no way.'"
• "Los Angeles County reimposes indoor mask mandate for
all as coronavirus cases rise nationwide," by Fenit Nirappil:
"Los Angeles County announced Thursday it will revive an indoor
mask mandate applying to everyone regardless of vaccination status
in response to rising coronavirus cases and hospitalizations linked to
the highly transmissible delta variant. The order to take effect late
Saturday in the county of 10 million people marks the most dramatic
reversal of the country's reopening this summer as experts fear a new
wave of the virus."
... and beyond
• "Arizona Senate to seek more election material from
Maricopa County; door-to-door questioning
recommended," by the Arizona Republic's Andrew Oxford and
Mary Jo Pitzl: "Arizona Senate President Karen Fann said Thursday
that the Legislature needs more materials and data from Maricopa
County for an unprecedented and controversial review of 2020
election results that is deep into its third month. Suggesting that the
Senate's review may not be nearing its end, Fann said during a
EFTA00162599
hearing at the Capitol that she expects the demands for additional
materials will end up in court, setting up yet another legal battle in the
saga that has seen the county and state lawmakers spar over the scope
of the Legislature's subpoena power."
• "Young Black activists helped change the state flag. They
intend to change the state," by the Mississippi Free Press's Nick
Judin and Ashton Pittman: " `We should talk about felony rights
restoration,' [said organizer Timothy Young, 22]. ... In 1890, white
supremacist lawmakers wrote felony voter disenfranchisement into
the state constitution, singling out certain crimes that they believed
Black residents were more likely to commit or, at least, get convicted
for committing. It was part of a larger effort to rollback Black gains
alongside other now-defunct Jim Crow voting provisions like poll
taxes and literacy tests. ... The felony disenfranchisement provision
still stands, though, barring thousands of Mississippians from ever
voting again even after serving their time. The number of Black
Mississippians who are permanently barred from voting because of
that law today exceeds the margin by which Republican Tate Reeves
beat Democrat Jim Hood in the 2019 election for governor."
On the Hill
Rep. Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio), chairwoman of the
Congressional Black Caucus, was arrested during a voting
rights protest at the Senate office building.
• Beatty was arrested along several activists, Vanessa Williams reports.
"Speakers voiced frustration that the Senate has not passed the For
the People Act, a far-reaching bill that would provide minimum
standards for early voting, vote-by-mail and automatic voter
registration, overriding many of the provisions in new Republican
state laws. The measure also would impose federal mandates for
nonpartisan congressional redistricting and public campaign
financing. They also called for Senate passage of the John Lewis
Voting Rights Act, which would restore a key provision of the Voting
Rights Act of 1965."
EFTA00162600
• "The statement was titled `Getting into Good Trouble, Defending
Voting Rights,' a nod to the late congressman John Lewis (D-Ga.) who
repeatedly urged the next generation of activists to get into 'good
trouble.' "
• "The protesters called on Senate Democrats, who with Vice President
Harris as tie-breaker hold a one-vote majority, to eliminate the 6o-
vote-threshold filibuster and pass the bills to counter laws enacted by
Republican legislatures across the country."
gA'Rep. Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio) is taken into custody by U.S. Capitol Police officers in
the Hart Senate Office Building, after a demonstration supporting the voting rights.
(Jose Luis Magana/AP)
Rep. Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio) is taken into custody by U.S. Capitol Police officers in the Hart Senate
Office Building, after a demonstration supporting the voting rights. (Jose Luis Magana/AP)
Meanwhile, Sen. Joe Manchin Ill (D-W.Va.) once again said
he will not support a filibuster exception for a voting rights
bill.
• Manchin's decision effectively dashes "chances that Democrats could
maneuver around Republican opposition to overhauling the nation's
elections laws," Bloomberg's Sophia Cai reports. "The West Virginia
Democrat made the remarks after meeting with a group of Texas
House Democrats who left the state to stall a vote on Republican-
backed legislation that they say would restrict voting."
Democrats are pushing for sweeping climate legislation
amid a scorching summer.
• "The far-reaching set of climate measures that Senate Democrats
outlined this week came as a scorching summer brought deadly heat
waves, deepened droughts and fueled wildfires across the American
West — the latest reminders of why the party has sought to prioritize
efforts to slow rising temperatures around the globe," Dino Grandoni,
Brady Dennis and Juliet Eilperin report.
• "While the $3.5 trillion budget deal that emerged Wednesday could
change in key ways in the months ahead, the proposal represents one
of the biggest efforts yet that Congress has undertaken to address
climate change. It underscores how cutting U.S. greenhouse gas
EFTA00162601
emissions — and spurring other nations to do the same — has
emerged as a central priority for Biden and his party."
• "Still, the climate measures unveiled this week face significant
political, legal and technical hurdles — including some from within
the Democratic Party itself. Already, [Manchin] has expressed
skepticism over the push to rapidly phase out fossil fuels."
• "The package represents the best chance of locking in the emissions
cuts required to meet Biden's goal of cutting U.S. greenhouse gas
emissions at least in half by 2030, compared to 2005 levels."
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (0-N.Y.) set a new
infrastructure deal deadline as the IRS provision faces
strong blowback.
• "[Schumer] sought to move lawmakers one step closer to debating
and potentially passing roughly $4 trillion in new federal spending,
announcing his plans to hold a key chamber vote on a still-forming
infrastructure deal next week," Tony Romm and Seung Min Kim
report. "The announcement essentially doubled as a major new
deadline for a group of roughly two dozen Democrats and
Republicans, who for the past few months have been hammering out a
proposal to invest dose to $1 trillion in the country's roads, bridges,
pipes, ports and Internet connections."
• "One of the key components financing their tentative legislation —
increased federal efforts to collect unpaid taxes — seemed in
particular political peril Thursday amid sustained GOP opposition. Its
potential absence from the final package left lawmakers scrambling to
find other ways to cover the costs of their long-sought infrastructure
investments, because some senators from both sides have maintained
that they are not willing to support an agreement that adds to the
deficit."
• "In calling for the early infrastructure vote next week, Schumer on
Thursday also issued a similar edict to his own caucus, telling
Democrats that they need to come to a full agreement on a second
package that includes additional spending to enact President Biden's
fuller economic agenda."
EFTA00162602
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) visited
Trump yesterday, showing how House Republicans see
their path back to power through the former president.
• "McCarthy became the latest in a parade of Republicans to make the
pilgrimage to a Trump-owned property seeking the former President's
support, while scores of GOP candidates have been invoking Trump's
name and image to boost their campaign coffers, which are filling up
at record rates," CNN's Melanie Zanona reports. "With Republicans
counting on Trump to be a crucial pillar of their efforts to reclaim the
House majority next year, both in terms of fundraising and turnout,
they are eager to stay in his good graces and reluctant to damage or
provoke the mercurial ex-President over the next 1.6 months."
• "'He's still the biggest dog in the Republican pound among the base,'
said Rep. Tim Burchett, a Republican from Tennessee, referring to
Trump."
• "Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has taken a decidedly
different approach toward Trump, careful to avoid talking about the
ex-President even as Trump promises to play a role in several key
contests. But for the most part, Republicans see far more political
upside to keeping Trump front and center."
Quote of the day
"They are brave, they are bold, they are courageous," said Senate
Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) about the Texas
lawmakers that left their state legislature to avoid voting on bills
that would limit voting rights. Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) called
the runaway lawmakers "defenders of the Constitution," while
Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) hailed them as "freedom
fighters."
The new world order
EFTA00162603
Records reveal how a Haitian American held in the probe
into the assassination of the Haitian president financed a
"personal security" team.
• Christian Emmanuel Sanon — a 63-year-old Haitian American and
self-described pastor and physician now detained in Haiti in
connection with the investigation into the audacious assassination of
Haitian President Jovenel Moise — met with "Walter Veintemilla, a
Florida financier who invests in infrastructure projects, and Antonio
"Tony" Intriago, the owner of a local security firm also in Florida,"
Shawn Boburg, Anthony Faiola, Samantha Schmidt and Dalton
Bennett report.
• "A company owned by Veintemilla, Worldwide Investment
Development Group, and Intriago's CTU Security would recruit and
assemble a private security force to protect Sanon until he became
Haiti's president, according to the details in an unsigned draft
consulting agreement obtained by The Post. Sanon ultimately would
repay them for their services using the country's assets, according to
the draft contract circulated on June 22."
Young Cuban activists are carrying on the fight for freedom
started by their parents and grandparents.
• "As Alberto Jimenez, 87, stood near the monument listening to the
chants from the rally, a torrential rain started and several young
protesters immediately rushed to shelter him with their umbrellas,"
Lori Rozsa reports. "'Don't worry, we'll stand here with you,' Olga
Rodriguez, 18, told Jimenez."
"It was the first protest Rodriguez and her friends had ever attended,
and her words carried meaning beyond just protecting Jimenez from
the rain. She and the hundreds of other young Cubans who have
joined protests here and on the island in recent days reflect what
some see as a changing of the guard. They believe they can win the
fight started by their parents and grandparents. Some of their elders
do, too. `These young people, they will make this change for freedom,'
said Jimenez."
EFTA00162604
Over 100 have died in the European floods.
• "As deadly floodwaters began to recede Friday across Germany and
Belgium, the full extent of the destruction was slowly revealed: muddy
washouts where homes used to stand, cars and debris tangled
together and officials still adding to a death toll that surpassed 115 and
could climb higher," Loveday Morris and Jennifer Hassan report. "
`Whole places are scarred by the disaster,' German President Frank-
Walter Steinmeier said at a news conference after the worst flooding
in decades to hit the region. `Many people have lost what they have
built all their lives.' "
• "The storm — a major low-pressure system that stretched from
Germany to France — brought a deluge Thursday that quickly swelled
rivers, collapsed bridges and roads and left many people scrambling
to rooftops or onto fallen trees. At one point, German officials said up
to 1,300 people remained unaccounted for. But the staggering figure
could be due to the fact that mobile phone networks were crippled."
The Amazon rainforest is the world's carbon sink. Parts of
it now release more carbon than can be absorbed.
• "A study recently published in the journal Nature suggests that fire
and deforestation, along with warmer temperatures and markedly
drier conditions, mean the world's largest rainforest is gradually
losing its ability to be a carbon sink," Rachel Pannett reports. "The
impact of changes to the Amazon reach far beyond South America."
• "Over the course of nearly a decade, the researchers used small planes
to collect hundreds of air samples at up to 14,800 feet above sea level.
They found that not only were carbon emissions greater in eastern
parts of the Amazon than in the west, but that the southeastern area
— a hot spot of deforestation — is now acting as a source of carbon
emissions into the atmosphere rather than a carbon sink."
Pulitzer Prize-winning Reuters photojournalist Danish
Siddiqui was killed in Afghanistan.
• Siddiqui "described intense clashes and a near miss on his Twitter
account. 'I was lucky to be safe and capture the visual of one of the
EFTA00162605
rockets hitting the armour plate overhead,' he tweeted Tuesday,"
Ezzatullah Mehrdad reports.
• "Siddiqui was with an Afghan special forces unit attempting to retake
the district of Spin Boldak, southeast of Kandahar city along the
border with Pakistan. He was killed along with a senior Afghan
officer, according to the Reuters report."
Hot on the left
Rep. Matt Gaetz's (R-Fla.) campaign paid $25,000 to a lawyer
who represented Jeffrey Epstein. "The Florida Republican and
acolyte of Trump is under investigation for possible sex trafficking of a
minor. A spokesman for Gaetz did not address the payment but touted the
congressman's fundraising haul, which totaled more than $1.3 million in
the second quarter of the year," Isaac Stanley-Becker reports. "The June
payment, for legal consulting, went to the law office of Marc Fernich,
whose website says he specializes in `subtle, novel and creative arguments
that other attorneys may miss.' "
Hot on the right
"Lindsey Graham pledges to 'go to war' for Chick-fil-A amid
Notre Dame protest," Emily Heil and Maria Luisa Paul report. "A group
of students at the University of Notre Dame had objected to the suggested
opening of a location on its campus, citing the company's history of
donating to anti-LBGTQ groups. The students also pointed to donations
made by Chick-fil-A's billionaire owner, Dan Cathy, to a group fighting the
Equality Act, legislation that would ban discrimination based on sexual
orientation. News of the students' beef with the chicken chain was
amplified by a story on Fox News ... Fox's headline was enough to prompt
Graham to stand up for Big Chicken."
;41
EFTA00162606
How K-pop conquered the universe, visualized
K-pop, mainstream pop music from South Korea, has a distinct recipe for
creating global hits. The main ingredient, a catchy hook song, gets paired
with a signature dance move and is wrapped up in a flashy video. Marian
Liu, Youjin Shin and Shelly Tan report on why K-pop is so popular.
Today in Washington
Biden will receive a briefing from members of the White House
coronavirus response at 1 p.m. At 2:3o p.m., Biden will depart the White
House en route to Camp David. He will receive the weekly economic
briefing at 3:45 p.m.
Harris will meet with members of the Black Women's Roundtable and
other women leaders on voting rights. At 4:2o p.m., she will deliver
remarks at a virtual finance event for the Democratic National Committee.
In closing
Stephen Colbert assessed Trump's claim that he is "not into coups:":
Gr
We think you'll like this newsletter
Check out National News email alerts for breaking news
email alerts for major national and political news whenever
it breaks. Sign up
EFTA00162607
RThe Washington Post
Manage my email newsletters and alerts I Unsubscribe from The Daily 202 I Privacy Policy I Help
You received this email because you signed up for The Daily 202 or because it is included in your subscription.
O2021 The Washington Post 1 1301 K St NW, Washington DC 20071
EFTA00162608
Document Preview
PDF source document
This document was extracted from a PDF. No image preview is available. The OCR text is shown on the left.
This document was extracted from a PDF. No image preview is available. The OCR text is shown on the left.
Extracted Information
Dates
Document Details
| Filename | EFTA00162594.pdf |
| File Size | 1112.2 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 24,468 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T11:01:19.355886 |